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for the watchman henri gbatien bertram iid-de-camp of napoleon at auslerlitz sec s-c died a his native place in france on 1st february 1844 Â« where the keen cold steel was flashing rtmrxl ambition's fiery ear then was bertrand's charger dashing in the van of lurid war anonymous of al that constellation briglrt the s had left to cheer be the one which shone wan sr hna just descended fromfiorsignt k*,t/j2 fconstantand serene if inkling with uncertain l'leam p u Â° when dark tempests veiled the scene its native splendor did remain ofthe fi r s magnitude how few i now remain to elver tlie view ? â€” . to dory's reign we bid adieir and weep to think man will pursue phantoms so baseless brief an 1 vain th julian s : rhi ins gone down leaving a halo f renown ar urn i ga'm ir^'i crown â€” the final blasl of fame shall own th fearful gran leur ofthe reign of wm who wore the massy thins a hero legislator king : and the same final blast of fame shall bertrand's loyalty proclaim p â€” ernbleraÂ«tica of napoleon bonaparte tnapoleon's gta ofthe legion of honour fhfsrru.meous j from todd's student's manual habits g be in the habit of learning something i from every man with whom you meet the observance or neglect of this rule { trill make a wonderful difference in your j character long before ihe time that you are forty years old all act upon it more or less bui few do it as a matter of habit i and calculation mosl act upon it as a | matter of interest or of curiosity at the moment the great difficulty is we be j ginloolate in life to make every thing j contribute to increase our stock of prac j lioai information sir walter scott gives us to understand that he never met with any man let his ccillingbe what it migh even the mosl stupid fellow that ever rtthli i down a horse from whom he could not by i few moments conversation learn something which he did not before know mid which was valuable lo him this trill account for tbe fact that be seemed to have an intuitive know ledge of every thing who but he would stop in the street and note down a word which drop ped among lhe oaths of two angry men â€” a word for which he had been looking formon'hs it is quite as important to go through lhe world with th ears open as with the ewes open " when 1 was ; young says cecil my mo her had a servant whose conduct i thought truly wise a man was hired to brew and this ran was to watch his method in or der tn learn bis art in the course of the process something was done which she did nol understand she asked him and he abused her with lhe vilest epithets for j her ignorance and stupidity my mo'her asked her how she bore such abuse ' i would be called said she worse names a thousand times for the sake of the in formation i got oul of him it is a false aotion thai we oughl to know nothing out of our par icular line of study or profes sion you will be none th 1 less distin guished in your calling for having ob tained an item of practical knowledge from every man with whom you meet and every man in his particular calling knows things which you do not and which are decidedly worth knowing mul.itudes of gifted and learned men sal under the ministry of the eloquent and routhful spencer they were superiors j lit every thing excepting his own profes 'â– sion and perhaps in that excepting the | point on which he had just been studying j and on which he was speaking yet they ! all felt thai they were deriving informa i tion profit and pleasure from his ministry i old-fashioned economists will tell you tever to pass an old nail or an old horse shoe or buckle or even a pin without taking it up because al hough you may not want it now you will tind a use for it j wine time or other 1 say the same thing 1 you with regard to knowledge how j ver useless it may appear to you at lhe j moment seize upon till that is fairly with j k your reach for there is in fact with in the whole circle of human observation | ot even a fugitive anecdote that vou i read in a newspaper or hear in conver i sation that will not come into play some ! time or other and occasions will arise j < when they involuntarily pr sent their dim j shadows in the train of your thinking and reasoning as belonging to that train and ' you will regret thai you cannot recall \ them more distinctly 1 do not recommend you to try to learn â– very thing far from it but while you have one great object in view you can ; wend to o her things which have a bear l g on your object if you were now sent n an express to mexico while the great ' l>ject before you would be to do yourer i rand well and expeditiously ought you . tot us you pass along to use your eyes i a,l l gaze upon the landscapes the rivers the deep glens the waterfalls the wild solitudes of nature which lie in your path : yughl you not lo have your ears open fo pick up what information story anecdote . act every thing of the kind which you : can and thus return wiser ? would all i this hinder you in the least i and would ! you not be fitting yourself by everv such ! requisition to be a more agreeable intel gent and useful man '. " sic sic se ha ; b rc rem necesse prorsus est t form fixed principles on which you ' ""Â«/â€¢â€¢ and act . a good scholar tries so to fix every word : j ais memory that when he meefs with j j^'n he need not turn to his dicliona '[ ,:/ his companion may dispute its deri i si 0 ! 1 ' 0r its g ender Â» and he ma }' not be : h to k te1 ' jnst how the word appeared j up p ; n he looked it out ; but he has made i lls min d about it and has a fixed opin 1 the carolina watchman bruner & james ) > " keep a check tton all yocr editors 4 proprietors v is safe - t â€” â€” â€” \ t s xew series rulers do thi axt liberty < gen i harrison / xumber 4 of volume i salisbury n c may 25 1844 ion he may not now be able to tell you by what process he came to ihat opinion it should be so with every thing do not examine a subject in order to get some jrpneral no'ion of it but if now in haste wait till you can do it thoroughly no matter wha it be â€” of qrreat importance or smill â€” if it be worih examining at all do it thoroughly and do it once for all ; so that whenever tlie subject shall again | come up your mind will be settled and at resf it is lhe possession of established and unwavering principles lhat makes a man a firm character these principles relate fo right and wrone and indeed to every thing about which the judgment has to balance probabilities do not be hasty in coming to conclusions young men generally err more by being precipi ta f e than for want of judgment if they will only give themselves time to weigh the matter iheir conclusions will usually be correct " i have long adopted an expedient ! which i have found of singular service i have a shelf in my study for tried au thors and one in my mind for tried prin i ciples and characters " when an author has s^opd a thorough examination and will bear to be taken as a guide i put him on the shelf " when i have more fully made up my j mind on a principle i put it on the shelf a hundred subtle objections may be bro't against ihis principle ; i may meet with | some of them perhaps ; but my principle is on the shelf generally i may be able ! to recall the reasons which weighed with me to put it there ; but if no i am not \ to be sent out to sea again time was when i saw through and detected all the j subtleties that could be brought against j it i have past evidence of having been fully convinced and there on the shelf it shall be ! j " when i have turned a character over and over on all sides and seen it through and through in all situations i put it on . the shelf there may be conduct in lhe person which may stumble others there may be great inconsistencies ; there may be s f range and unaccountable turns but ! i have put that character on the shelf ! difficulties will all be cleared ; everything will come round again i should be much chagrined indeed to be obliged to take ' a character down which i had once put up but that has never been the case with j tne yet ; and the best guard against it is not to be too hasty in putting them there i those who understand the above keen remarks by experience well know what a luxury it is on particular occasions when the mind is fatigued or the memo ! ry is weak and doubts are started con j corning some point of great importance to \ have this " shelf of established princi j pies to which you can go i have never been able to read the history of lhe mar i tyrdom of the venerable latimer without i being touched almost to tears to see him i clinging to his long-established principles they urged him fo dispute and prove his i religion true and lhe popish false he â€¢ knew that he was old and had lost some ' what of the strength of his mind he j would not dispute he left that for young and vigorous minds while he died simply repeating his belief he knew very well that he had once examined the subject with all the vigor of his intellect and he j was not to go and take these principles | down from the " shelf and again prove | them to be correct conduct which stands on such a basis and character which strikes ils roots thus deep will be such as will bear scrutiny and sach as no storm can shake ' " th man resolved and steady to his trust inflexible to ill and obstinately just may the rude rabble's insolence despise their senseless clamors an 1 tumultuous cries ; the tyrant's fierceness he beguiles and the stem brow and th hirsh voice defies and with superior greatness smiles 8 be simple and neat in your personal habits it is frequently said that " some pride is necessary among men else they would i not be decent in their appearance if lhe remark means any thing i suppose it ! means that pride adds much and frequent : ly to our personal appearance but an j angel or any sinless spirit i doubt not would be a gentleman in appearance and dress and thai not from pride but from a , desire to be more useful and more happy j nothing will so uniformly and certainly make you unpopular as to have any ha bits that are slovenly if you have ever learned to chew or smoke that indian weed called tobacco l'beg that you will at once drop all cleanse your mouth and never again defile your self with it nicholas monardus a ger ; man has written a large folio on the vir tues of tobacco ; but it would take ma ; ny such folios to prove it worthy of a place among civilized men let a man be thrown from a ship wreck upon a desert island and in a state of starvation and he would rather die than to eat this weed though lhe island might be covered with it ; and no youth can use it either in chewing or smoking without decided and permanent injury to his appearance health and progress in study let a company spend the evening in smoking the cigar : and what is the effect .' they all awake in the morning restless feverish low-spi rited and dissatisfied the mouth is clammy and bitter the stomach uneasy and each one feels like pouring out the , vital principle in yawning the custom | certainly seems most at home in a filihy ale-house or bar-room when the fash ion was so strong in england that james i could get no one lo preach against it his royal hand took the pen and wrote a treatise which he denominates " a coun terblast to tobacco the strength of his 'â€¢ princely an'idote may be gaihered from ! the folio wing closing paragraph of this royal counterblast .' it is a custom loath some to lhe eye hateful to lhe nose harm i ful to the breun dangerous to the lung j and in the black fume thereof nearest resembling the horrible stygeian smoke ofthe pit lhat is bottomless all experienced people will tell you that the habit of using tobacco in any | shape will soon render you emaciated and consumptive your nerves shattered i your spirits low and moody your throat dry and demanding simula ing drinks your person filihy and your habits those of a swine let your dress be neat and simple do not feel lhat the body which is merely a | case for the soul is of too great impor tance at the same time he who is a : 4i good and true man will be likely to | keep the outside of his house in good order j in a certain village there is a house which â– seems designed to be foppish its front is ; white its left green its back yellow and its right red nothing could be more ridic j ulous and yet is not more rediculous in j reality than the dress of many a house j that the soul must inhabit i would re ; commend that your clothes be of good j quality â€” so good that you constantly feel ' that they are worth preserving â€” and lhat : you feel anxious to show your economy by lhe length of lime they last for ex j ercise you should have a different dress ! no one can enjoy himself who undertakes to study and exercise in the same dress in j your study use an old coat or gown you j will feel more easy and comfortable and j your dress-coat will last all the better for j it some wear a baize jacket in study ; and this is very well i know of one who always studies summer and winter in his shirt sleeves ; and ihough i have an opin ion of him quite as high as he deserves yet i cannot recommend the practice \ our dress should be warm if you ! wear flannels next the skin be sure to take them all off when you sleep be j sure also to keep your feet dry and warn in order to this you must use them even day in walking the question in rela tion to dress should be not " how often can i have a new hat or coat ?" but " how long can i wearit,and keep it hand some v he who undertakes to be very nice and finical in his dress will make but a poor student he descends towards the animal world dryden in his fable '< of the cock and the fox seems to have i had a dandy before him â€” " then turning said to partlet " see my clear how lavish nature h:ith adorned the year : how the pale primrose and the violets spring an 1 birds assay their throats disused io sing all these are ours ; and i with pleasure see man strutting on two legs and aping me '." no slave is so abject as he who tries to keep near the head in the race of fash ions alexander is said to have had a neck that was wry and this created a fashion so that his courtiers all held their heads on one side he was most fash ionable who lopped his head the most was this more ridiculous than what the votaries of fashion must do continually but cannot a student be particularly nice about his dress wi hout having his heart all in it ? 1 reply " lhat whenever you see the tail of a fox out of the hole you may be pretty sure that the fox is in the hole keep your clothes neat and clean your coat your hat your boots or shoes and be neat as to your linen ; but do not feel that this is by any means the great business of life l pay particular attention to your teeth ; by this i mean simply cleanse them with a soft brush and with water in which a litile common salt is dissolved the last thing before you retire at night this simple direction failhfully followed will ordinarily keep the teeth good till old age i would urge this because if neglected the following are the results : y'our breath will inevitably become offensive ! from defective teeih your comfort will be destroyed by frequent tooth-ache : your health will suffer for the want of good teeth to masticate the food ; and last though not least you will early lose your ' teeth and thus your public speaking will be irretrievably injured these may seem small affairs now but the habit of neglect will assuredly bring bitter repen tance when it is too late to remedy the neglect do not affect singularity in any of your habits we never feel at home with a man of odd habits ; and any such will assuredly increase upon him he makes a heavy draft upon the kindness of man kind who is every day demanding that they bear with his eccentricities you may now recollect a most excellent man who is often seen in company with his feet poised upon the top of a chair and nearly as high as his head and not un ! frequently upon a table the habit was ! acquired when a student ; and though a ; whole company has often ached over the ! habit yet it remains unaltered y'ou may ; be boorish in manners and be like john son in that respect ; but he had talents and industry which could make him distin j guished in spite of his ill manners be particularly attentive to your be 1 haviour at table ; for from his situation the student is peculiarly tempted to err there there is an abruptness and blunt ness in the manners of some professional men â€” a complete treading under foot of all politeness it may be attributed to the fact lhat ihey probably associated but little with refined society while students ; and when they came out into the world not knowing how to behave they put on the blunt hair-cloth mode as if conscious of abilities which would suffer them to de spise form and politeness but a man is never more mistaken than when he sup poses that any strength of mind or attain ments will render his company agreeable . while his manners are rude if you are i accustomed to society behave as you know how ; if not accustomed to it be have modestly and you will behave well so lhat in all your intercourse with your fellow-students always maintain the ap pearance and character of a gentleman ; never that of a buffoon or a sloven and as your character now is in these re spects so it is to be through life i have known students whose wash-stand and establishment showed that they were slo vens ; and ihey were never known to-im prove in these respects keep your room and person at all times just as you would j have it if you expected your mother or j sister to make you a visit neatness is j the word by which to designate all that j is meant in regard to your personal ap j pearance cleanliness is the first mark of polite ness it is agreeable to others and is a very pleasant sensation to ourselves the humor of swift was not misapplied when he describes himself as recovering from sickness by changing his linen a clean neat appearance is always a good letter of introduction may i request my rea ders to gather lhe application and moral ofthe following beautiful story a de vise of great sanctity one morning had the misfortune as he took up a crystal cup which was consecrated to the pro phet to let it full upon the ground and dash it to pieces his son coming in some time after he stretched out his hand to bless him as his manner was every mor ning : but the youlh going out scumbled over lhe threshold and broke his arm as the old man wondered at these events a caravan passed by in its way to mecca : the dervise approached it to beg a bless ing ; % but as he stroked one of the holy camels he received a kick from the beast which sorely bruised him ! his sorrow and amazement increased upon him un til he recollected lhat ihrough hurry and inadvertency he had that morning come abroad without washing his hands 9 acejuire the habit of doing every thing well it is well known that johnson used to write and send copy to the press without even looking it over by way of revising this was the effect of habit he began by composing slowly but with great ac curacy we are naturally impatient of restraint and have so little patience at our command that it is a rare thing to find a young man doing any thing as well as he can he wishes to do it quickly and in the conversation of students you seldom hear one tell how well he did this or that but how quickly this is a perni cious habit any thing that is worth do ing at all is worth doing well ; and a mind well disciplined in other respects is defective if it have not this habit a young man who unexpectedly lost the af fections of a young lady of whom he was sufficiently fond informed his friend with a good degree of shrewdness that he doubted not lhat he lost the prize from a very small circumstance she handed him a letter which she had been writing to a friend and asked him to direct it â€” he did so but in a manner so hurried and slovenly for it was his great ambi tion to be quick in doing any ihing that she blushed when she received it from that utile circumstance her affections seemed to cool until they were dead to him his friend comforted him by say ing that " she was more than half right this incident is mentioned not on ac count of its dignity but to illustrate the point in hand every thing should be done well and practice will soon enable you to do it quickly how many are mis erable readers and miserable writers as to manner and matter because they do not possess this habit ! euripides used to compose but three lines while a contem porary poet composed three hundred ; but one wrote for immortality and the j other for the day your reading had bet 1 ter be but little your conversations but few your compositions short and well done the man who is in a " great hur rv is commonly the one w ho hurries over ; the small stages of the journey without making the great business of life to con 'â– â– sist in accomplishing as much as possible the great secret of buonaparte's skill as ; a warrior consisted in this ; that he did his business thoroughly : if he met an ar my in two or three divisions he did not divide his army in the same proportion no : he brought all his strength to bear \ upon one point until that was annihila j ted so with mcdonough during our j last war he directed all his force every j gun against_the " big ship of the enemy ; so matter how pressing or annoying oth ers might be ; every ball was to be sent towards the u big ship till her guns j j were silen this is a irood principle to j carry out in resrnrd to every thing 'â€¢ how is it that you do so much ?" said one in astonishment at the efforts and suc cess of a great man ** why i do but one thing at a time and try to finish it once ! for all i would therefore have you keep ihis in mind : â€” do not send a letter home blotted or hurried and ask them to excuse it because you are in a hurry â€” you have no riirht to be in such a hurry it is doinz injustice to yourself do not make a memorandum so carelessly that in five years you can make nothing of ir do not hurry any thing so that you know not what you do or do not knowcertainly about it and have to trus to vasrue im pressions what we call a superficial character is formÂ°d in this way ; and none who are no f careful to form and cherish tlie habit of doing every thing tccll may expect to be any thins else than superficial to he conlniued pay your debts religion that d.>os not make i man honest is good tor nothing if a nun professes to be a christian and defrauds his neighbor that man's religion is vain and he is dishonest who with holds from another lhat which is his due when it is in his power to pay it we in this country have a had name abroad for our state repudiations but it is tint this of which we wish to speak just now it is ofthe laxnesss not to call it by a harsher name of many professors of religion who seldom or ne ver pay their debts until after being called upon again and again and perhaps finally being threatened with a s-.iii at law there are some such m n in aim ist every community we have one of thes men now in our eye i he is a very amiable easy man who never wishes to quarrel with his neighbors and is al ways willing to do them a favor when thev are in want of help but he never pays his debts if he can av : id it his bills at the store at the shops of mechanics perhaps for the f iocl : which he eafs or the raiment he wears are un paid and he feels not the least compunctions of conscience on the subject he prays in his fam ilyand in the social meeting an 1 some people think that he in iv be a christian ; but men f the world say titat if he would be honest they would have a better opinion of his religion we see another debtor he has no objec tion to buying anything that he can get upon trust : he will even subscribe for a religious newspaper or a new edition of tlie bible and makes load professions f his willingness to aid this object an 1 that but when called on to pay his subscription be is unfortunately just then out of m mey he will certainly pay it in a few days ; but he is no m re ready a m rath af terwards than he was before and he never in i tends to pay he pretends nevertheless to be a pious man but he deceives very i w just now we see another man of this always : owing and never.paying class some time ago ! he conhaeted a heavy debt and he lias never j yet seen the time when he could pay the whole i of it at once ; and therefore he has paid none 1 of it his income has been such that he might ! with a little economy and denial have pai i a part of tlie debt every year and by this time have extinguished it ; but his conscience does ; not seem to trouble him at all alth nigh be lives on that which does not belong to him men may sophisticate as they please thev can never make it right and all the bankrupt laws in the universe can never make it right for them to neglect to pay their debts th<*re is sin in this neglect as clear and as deserving church discipline as in mealing or false swear ing he who violates his promise to pay or withholds the payment of a debt when il is wiih in his power to meet his engagement ought t be made to feel that in the si^ht of god mid . of ail honest men he is a swindler religi.ni may be a very comfortable cloak under which to hide ; but if religion d;>es not make a man ' deal justly it is not worth having but what shall a pour man do who is in debt ' let him work hard and pay it em yourself all the luxuries and very many of the comforts t life : be willing to take an humble place in so ciety and mortify your pride ; in dress and style of living be as simple and economical as pos : sible ; if necessary live on bread and water | and labor diligently until you satisfy the de i mantis of your last creditor : but never lay up i a cent of money nor spend a cent needlessly ; while you owe it to another we wish that ! this principle could ik ingrained into the hearts â– and consciences at lea.-t of professing chris 1 tians there is a looseness on the subject in ; the church that is perfectly irreconcilable vrith ! the law of tou and the maintenance of a good '., reputation in the eyes of the world let no man be trusted who neglects to pav : his debts if misfortune has suddenly deprived him of the ability to pay that is another thing : i but if by his c induct he shows that he has no disposition to meet bis engagements especially small debts let him not be trusted he that i unjust in a little will !*â€¢ unjust in much he who defrauds will and there is scarcely no difference between stealing and wilfully ne glecting to discharge a debt â€” v v observer very late fbom ii vyti complete orrr'hrow of th m-dafto govern ment â€” from capt ho rt ofthe brig republic who left port republican on the jtih ultim Â». and arrived here on monday evening says the n y hun we learn that the blaclu have been entirely successful in their engagements with the government troops hera.d s forces had disbanded in the north and he took ret'ige in port republican but was hotly pursued by a superior numerical force ami rt is believed he could not hold out many days the revolu tionists have established an independent gov ernment in the spanish part ofthe island the french admiral lay off port republican with three frigates waiting the issue ot events he would probably take possession of the island and the expected failure of the government to pay the indemnity due to france would be used as a pretext for that purpose the black pop ulation has been fighting for a republican form of government instead of a military despo tisrn and we thiuk the pn miy of the island will cost france rhuch m re th.in artv i*>cunia ry advantage she can ever expect from il prof morses bectro-aaagoetie tuend^ja cmnae o coosowaion between w a *; ti . on anibabhnaae Â» now in faflopc soma ,,â€¢ ,â€ž... /__ w ion ihe care from this city on their w rj to washing ton on \\ e faesday w within tw vv m , - of the lat ter cry raftormathni of the whig noui n tl cms for pre-si dent and vice presi lent were eomniameated v nit in oi ihe telegraph the said tt rs the amok 9 miles and back again making 41 miles m no i^ercepu bie parr of a second of time thornton ii freemmn formerly ptiniimm at car roilton miss.ri.-j who asrpetratel i aeries ci aaaat art fully devised mail robberies and rle i io cmnada ha been delivered up by the canadian anrho snug birth â€” it appears from a report made hy mr connor of the pennsylvania legislatare thai th mem bers are furnished at lhe public expense with eaa sealing wax waters steel pens snapx cigars ananaaanlej flowers razor washing aoap-'raxor-arops pen-kn re ivory folders too - â€¢-. hat brashes nail broshel me heme ar - : ewe'iery perfumery and canes tie egg hatcki g establishmenl has rv-eome one of die nons o vi town tisvishe daily by handreds of persons lhe poor hens a ... rolled of all maternal pleasures we - . fai k e ia c"..n neerjcal is'hiveuiing a machine to lav rss when it is completed all bam door f an illustration of a - g - _-. occurred before ihesapreme conn of n w jersey u â– recent term the court were examining a wi.-j h can late or the honor of ihe cjeert bag wh .: - ; ,-, iri ' askc . leof the bench ' a place an ithesta lent in the let ters if not the words of b a ksrone wktt â€” â– Â« justice is judicially adknintstere l their honors looked grave but did not withhold the diploma latex â€” samuel j barr.has been apppointed bv the president and confirmed by ihe senate to be secretary ofthe territory of iowa fated to death â€” an entrl - : mn and a yanke fbaght a doe in a dark room lately t .â€¢ v . ke bm wishing to have wo ? an .. - bands â€¢â– i his pistol up th chimney a to bis horror dawn came th bag ian man master printers in the tun f ci arte i archbish op la al procured a ; >-Â» passe j tt the stir chamber july 1,1637 " toregalate - yshej v :. ihe trade of printing and pret : a . abaa -- of that excd len an to the distnrban â€¢ ofthechorob " py this decree it was ot lered " th tl i - ace forth shon 1 be reduce 1 t a cerra n m i â€¢â€¢â€¢- . other shnald secretly or <â€¢:â– that trade sb l>e set in the pillory or whippe 1 through ibe strec is and sittcr other ; u lishm al as ::. .: a i:t mighl dunk lit to inflict npon the ofien ler ju l_re mnrny ofthe i o trt of m : â– : â– â€¢ i â– â– â– ry a - ha mi committed suicide aboat a f ow ing oal his brains with â– pistol the canst i th - mel ancholy act w is love tbejo ige w is i mobi â€¢ only a few weeks before a w ,^ :'â– . \ torn he w.-.s engage 1 i>ut on returning toc er oi the la ly refuse i his vhich so operated npon .!.._'â€¢ ms - om mission of an act wh munity in which h lived >..;' a useful citizen an upright ju iÂ»-.aud an honest man . j mdihi dir i w-dijewond joseph fr.,rn convicted at si lou Â»' fthe murder of chavis the mexican trader have ce seal rncft ; i e banged on ihe 14th of ju-te n-x the sentence of thomas tawson also convicted of participation i.i the mnrder w is deferred 4rj'/<<;-i hants â€” \ :â€¢' vrahian ho-srs a present fi m the imaura i v vit to ih pi nt of th dn te i si - ". â– 'â€¢ . - 1 iv n the \< a | te e . . :" . z . thar â€¢ attack on the smofthe late a taaa â€” it w-ill !>â€¢ : that ainasa spragu â– sena tor spragoe was ma len - ii the Â»Â» dnity of providence where â€” i and th<ft a man named gordon ; ::- - i conaigted of the crime on we ines lay evÂ«_pinz the n of ihe decasej w;i attacked by an i ishman i the s n â€¢ â– ; in . and so terribly beaten that hi f is co - lered in dan ger the tra script a iys no lue i â€¢ the rnfri â€¢ discovered the unfortunat victim is quite i !â€¢â€¢ y jadg - e : .' â– â– â€” is it not a shs i fitll â– â€¢ entiaries whi jpos a jud â€¢ . . vci tho isand illegal voters ssioa , i removal from office ap or rasi .. 'â– â€¢â€¢â– aed of t i'.ii as â– â– ... - - 3 or wh ppe i : it a pa . y i.f sab verting the very fon . of ihe elective franchis v by making 1.71 fraudulent voters is suffered to roal â€¢ . with his head onshorn an 1 his back unseated â€” lamoille journal a man called tlie western whistk r is whistling con certs in the boston theatres the rw a y " the sound he emits is clear an 1 distinct and us loud as a clarionet " indian outrage â€” the tan boren vk intÂ«-iii_r 1 cer say that a party of < usages the 30th all . attack ed the settlement of nt edwards a citizen of the united states and trader living ti little river who drove in all the persons living there including same cherokeea and creeks and carried olf a the horses ait r destroy inÂ«_'wh:it proj y hey could not carry off or thai i y could in'ike do us t fin stirk'iia â€” a boston paper states tha the pm manufactory near derby < i d . l.a a contrivance liar sticking pins in papers w fi is , i *â– marvc â– :- it takes in england sixty iem ne day by sun light ninety packs consisting â€¢: 302.460 jmis â€” rh same thing is performed ln-re in the same time by one e woman il r sole xcopaomi si i a n.^n at a time ituo a hopper t om w otae ooi nl neatly arranged upon thÂ»*!r sev . , - the me chanism by w;ti<-h the labor of sfry-nim saved yet remains a mystery to all but the inventor : and no person iut th single one wh.i attends t it i up on any pretext whatever ai.ipw'-j to enter the room where it operati - american missions â€” the number of clergymen now employed iu fc:rti<_-ti mis sion's by th different evangelical socie ties in the united staw-s is according to a sr;t'Â»-m<ttt in the " foreign missionary chronicle â€¢Â£*'>. of these m are among the indian tribes ; i in t >: n : id in africa 42 in couitiriee on the m''di:<rra nean .">â€¢"> in india ; 37 iti farther india ; 25 in polynesia ; 11 in europe and 1 in soath america the number c>f native communicants connected with those mis sions is 33,259 scholars 32^15 ; assist ant missionaries tÂ»'2 and native assistants 226 bait san european mbsswhs â€” l'he number of clergymen employed c>n foreign missions by the diife"Â«':i f evangelical societies in kuro is 777 of these 270 are iif the wys indies j 3 in west africa j 3 in east africa 115 in south africa 2 in the african islands ; 7 in countries o i the mediterranean 251 in india and ceylon 10 in farther india ; 3 among the ame rican indians and in polynesia the number of cor*vnÂ»unicants connected with thr-s e missions is 1 3o 7 1 ; scholar - 00.207 assistant missionaries 1 19 ; uaivc assist ants 1,703 â€” lb papal mission â€” â– f#526ix)0 expended in one year by the association for propa gating the faith established a lyons in france 943,000 was expended for mis sions in europe ; 193,000 for missions in asia 50,000 for missions in oceanica embracing the islands of the pacific and indian oceans a id 164,000 for missions in america of their periodicals entitled th annals about 120,000 copies publish ed are now print i in seven languages viz fn rich 63j0o0 ; german 17,000 english 16,090 spanish ll,0oo;flem ish 4,000 italian l^-mi portuguese o.ooo amer messenger

for the watchman henri gbatien bertram iid-de-camp of napoleon at auslerlitz sec s-c died a his native place in france on 1st february 1844 Â« where the keen cold steel was flashing rtmrxl ambition's fiery ear then was bertrand's charger dashing in the van of lurid war anonymous of al that constellation briglrt the s had left to cheer be the one which shone wan sr hna just descended fromfiorsignt k*,t/j2 fconstantand serene if inkling with uncertain l'leam p u Â° when dark tempests veiled the scene its native splendor did remain ofthe fi r s magnitude how few i now remain to elver tlie view ? â€” . to dory's reign we bid adieir and weep to think man will pursue phantoms so baseless brief an 1 vain th julian s : rhi ins gone down leaving a halo f renown ar urn i ga'm ir^'i crown â€” the final blasl of fame shall own th fearful gran leur ofthe reign of wm who wore the massy thins a hero legislator king : and the same final blast of fame shall bertrand's loyalty proclaim p â€” ernbleraÂ«tica of napoleon bonaparte tnapoleon's gta ofthe legion of honour fhfsrru.meous j from todd's student's manual habits g be in the habit of learning something i from every man with whom you meet the observance or neglect of this rule { trill make a wonderful difference in your j character long before ihe time that you are forty years old all act upon it more or less bui few do it as a matter of habit i and calculation mosl act upon it as a | matter of interest or of curiosity at the moment the great difficulty is we be j ginloolate in life to make every thing j contribute to increase our stock of prac j lioai information sir walter scott gives us to understand that he never met with any man let his ccillingbe what it migh even the mosl stupid fellow that ever rtthli i down a horse from whom he could not by i few moments conversation learn something which he did not before know mid which was valuable lo him this trill account for tbe fact that be seemed to have an intuitive know ledge of every thing who but he would stop in the street and note down a word which drop ped among lhe oaths of two angry men â€” a word for which he had been looking formon'hs it is quite as important to go through lhe world with th ears open as with the ewes open " when 1 was ; young says cecil my mo her had a servant whose conduct i thought truly wise a man was hired to brew and this ran was to watch his method in or der tn learn bis art in the course of the process something was done which she did nol understand she asked him and he abused her with lhe vilest epithets for j her ignorance and stupidity my mo'her asked her how she bore such abuse ' i would be called said she worse names a thousand times for the sake of the in formation i got oul of him it is a false aotion thai we oughl to know nothing out of our par icular line of study or profes sion you will be none th 1 less distin guished in your calling for having ob tained an item of practical knowledge from every man with whom you meet and every man in his particular calling knows things which you do not and which are decidedly worth knowing mul.itudes of gifted and learned men sal under the ministry of the eloquent and routhful spencer they were superiors j lit every thing excepting his own profes 'â– sion and perhaps in that excepting the | point on which he had just been studying j and on which he was speaking yet they ! all felt thai they were deriving informa i tion profit and pleasure from his ministry i old-fashioned economists will tell you tever to pass an old nail or an old horse shoe or buckle or even a pin without taking it up because al hough you may not want it now you will tind a use for it j wine time or other 1 say the same thing 1 you with regard to knowledge how j ver useless it may appear to you at lhe j moment seize upon till that is fairly with j k your reach for there is in fact with in the whole circle of human observation | ot even a fugitive anecdote that vou i read in a newspaper or hear in conver i sation that will not come into play some ! time or other and occasions will arise j < when they involuntarily pr sent their dim j shadows in the train of your thinking and reasoning as belonging to that train and ' you will regret thai you cannot recall \ them more distinctly 1 do not recommend you to try to learn â– very thing far from it but while you have one great object in view you can ; wend to o her things which have a bear l g on your object if you were now sent n an express to mexico while the great ' l>ject before you would be to do yourer i rand well and expeditiously ought you . tot us you pass along to use your eyes i a,l l gaze upon the landscapes the rivers the deep glens the waterfalls the wild solitudes of nature which lie in your path : yughl you not lo have your ears open fo pick up what information story anecdote . act every thing of the kind which you : can and thus return wiser ? would all i this hinder you in the least i and would ! you not be fitting yourself by everv such ! requisition to be a more agreeable intel gent and useful man '. " sic sic se ha ; b rc rem necesse prorsus est t form fixed principles on which you ' ""Â«/â€¢â€¢ and act . a good scholar tries so to fix every word : j ais memory that when he meefs with j j^'n he need not turn to his dicliona '[ ,:/ his companion may dispute its deri i si 0 ! 1 ' 0r its g ender Â» and he ma }' not be : h to k te1 ' jnst how the word appeared j up p ; n he looked it out ; but he has made i lls min d about it and has a fixed opin 1 the carolina watchman bruner & james ) > " keep a check tton all yocr editors 4 proprietors v is safe - t â€” â€” â€” \ t s xew series rulers do thi axt liberty < gen i harrison / xumber 4 of volume i salisbury n c may 25 1844 ion he may not now be able to tell you by what process he came to ihat opinion it should be so with every thing do not examine a subject in order to get some jrpneral no'ion of it but if now in haste wait till you can do it thoroughly no matter wha it be â€” of qrreat importance or smill â€” if it be worih examining at all do it thoroughly and do it once for all ; so that whenever tlie subject shall again | come up your mind will be settled and at resf it is lhe possession of established and unwavering principles lhat makes a man a firm character these principles relate fo right and wrone and indeed to every thing about which the judgment has to balance probabilities do not be hasty in coming to conclusions young men generally err more by being precipi ta f e than for want of judgment if they will only give themselves time to weigh the matter iheir conclusions will usually be correct " i have long adopted an expedient ! which i have found of singular service i have a shelf in my study for tried au thors and one in my mind for tried prin i ciples and characters " when an author has s^opd a thorough examination and will bear to be taken as a guide i put him on the shelf " when i have more fully made up my j mind on a principle i put it on the shelf a hundred subtle objections may be bro't against ihis principle ; i may meet with | some of them perhaps ; but my principle is on the shelf generally i may be able ! to recall the reasons which weighed with me to put it there ; but if no i am not \ to be sent out to sea again time was when i saw through and detected all the j subtleties that could be brought against j it i have past evidence of having been fully convinced and there on the shelf it shall be ! j " when i have turned a character over and over on all sides and seen it through and through in all situations i put it on . the shelf there may be conduct in lhe person which may stumble others there may be great inconsistencies ; there may be s f range and unaccountable turns but ! i have put that character on the shelf ! difficulties will all be cleared ; everything will come round again i should be much chagrined indeed to be obliged to take ' a character down which i had once put up but that has never been the case with j tne yet ; and the best guard against it is not to be too hasty in putting them there i those who understand the above keen remarks by experience well know what a luxury it is on particular occasions when the mind is fatigued or the memo ! ry is weak and doubts are started con j corning some point of great importance to \ have this " shelf of established princi j pies to which you can go i have never been able to read the history of lhe mar i tyrdom of the venerable latimer without i being touched almost to tears to see him i clinging to his long-established principles they urged him fo dispute and prove his i religion true and lhe popish false he â€¢ knew that he was old and had lost some ' what of the strength of his mind he j would not dispute he left that for young and vigorous minds while he died simply repeating his belief he knew very well that he had once examined the subject with all the vigor of his intellect and he j was not to go and take these principles | down from the " shelf and again prove | them to be correct conduct which stands on such a basis and character which strikes ils roots thus deep will be such as will bear scrutiny and sach as no storm can shake ' " th man resolved and steady to his trust inflexible to ill and obstinately just may the rude rabble's insolence despise their senseless clamors an 1 tumultuous cries ; the tyrant's fierceness he beguiles and the stem brow and th hirsh voice defies and with superior greatness smiles 8 be simple and neat in your personal habits it is frequently said that " some pride is necessary among men else they would i not be decent in their appearance if lhe remark means any thing i suppose it ! means that pride adds much and frequent : ly to our personal appearance but an j angel or any sinless spirit i doubt not would be a gentleman in appearance and dress and thai not from pride but from a , desire to be more useful and more happy j nothing will so uniformly and certainly make you unpopular as to have any ha bits that are slovenly if you have ever learned to chew or smoke that indian weed called tobacco l'beg that you will at once drop all cleanse your mouth and never again defile your self with it nicholas monardus a ger ; man has written a large folio on the vir tues of tobacco ; but it would take ma ; ny such folios to prove it worthy of a place among civilized men let a man be thrown from a ship wreck upon a desert island and in a state of starvation and he would rather die than to eat this weed though lhe island might be covered with it ; and no youth can use it either in chewing or smoking without decided and permanent injury to his appearance health and progress in study let a company spend the evening in smoking the cigar : and what is the effect .' they all awake in the morning restless feverish low-spi rited and dissatisfied the mouth is clammy and bitter the stomach uneasy and each one feels like pouring out the , vital principle in yawning the custom | certainly seems most at home in a filihy ale-house or bar-room when the fash ion was so strong in england that james i could get no one lo preach against it his royal hand took the pen and wrote a treatise which he denominates " a coun terblast to tobacco the strength of his 'â€¢ princely an'idote may be gaihered from ! the folio wing closing paragraph of this royal counterblast .' it is a custom loath some to lhe eye hateful to lhe nose harm i ful to the breun dangerous to the lung j and in the black fume thereof nearest resembling the horrible stygeian smoke ofthe pit lhat is bottomless all experienced people will tell you that the habit of using tobacco in any | shape will soon render you emaciated and consumptive your nerves shattered i your spirits low and moody your throat dry and demanding simula ing drinks your person filihy and your habits those of a swine let your dress be neat and simple do not feel lhat the body which is merely a | case for the soul is of too great impor tance at the same time he who is a : 4i good and true man will be likely to | keep the outside of his house in good order j in a certain village there is a house which â– seems designed to be foppish its front is ; white its left green its back yellow and its right red nothing could be more ridic j ulous and yet is not more rediculous in j reality than the dress of many a house j that the soul must inhabit i would re ; commend that your clothes be of good j quality â€” so good that you constantly feel ' that they are worth preserving â€” and lhat : you feel anxious to show your economy by lhe length of lime they last for ex j ercise you should have a different dress ! no one can enjoy himself who undertakes to study and exercise in the same dress in j your study use an old coat or gown you j will feel more easy and comfortable and j your dress-coat will last all the better for j it some wear a baize jacket in study ; and this is very well i know of one who always studies summer and winter in his shirt sleeves ; and ihough i have an opin ion of him quite as high as he deserves yet i cannot recommend the practice \ our dress should be warm if you ! wear flannels next the skin be sure to take them all off when you sleep be j sure also to keep your feet dry and warn in order to this you must use them even day in walking the question in rela tion to dress should be not " how often can i have a new hat or coat ?" but " how long can i wearit,and keep it hand some v he who undertakes to be very nice and finical in his dress will make but a poor student he descends towards the animal world dryden in his fable '< of the cock and the fox seems to have i had a dandy before him â€” " then turning said to partlet " see my clear how lavish nature h:ith adorned the year : how the pale primrose and the violets spring an 1 birds assay their throats disused io sing all these are ours ; and i with pleasure see man strutting on two legs and aping me '." no slave is so abject as he who tries to keep near the head in the race of fash ions alexander is said to have had a neck that was wry and this created a fashion so that his courtiers all held their heads on one side he was most fash ionable who lopped his head the most was this more ridiculous than what the votaries of fashion must do continually but cannot a student be particularly nice about his dress wi hout having his heart all in it ? 1 reply " lhat whenever you see the tail of a fox out of the hole you may be pretty sure that the fox is in the hole keep your clothes neat and clean your coat your hat your boots or shoes and be neat as to your linen ; but do not feel that this is by any means the great business of life l pay particular attention to your teeth ; by this i mean simply cleanse them with a soft brush and with water in which a litile common salt is dissolved the last thing before you retire at night this simple direction failhfully followed will ordinarily keep the teeth good till old age i would urge this because if neglected the following are the results : y'our breath will inevitably become offensive ! from defective teeih your comfort will be destroyed by frequent tooth-ache : your health will suffer for the want of good teeth to masticate the food ; and last though not least you will early lose your ' teeth and thus your public speaking will be irretrievably injured these may seem small affairs now but the habit of neglect will assuredly bring bitter repen tance when it is too late to remedy the neglect do not affect singularity in any of your habits we never feel at home with a man of odd habits ; and any such will assuredly increase upon him he makes a heavy draft upon the kindness of man kind who is every day demanding that they bear with his eccentricities you may now recollect a most excellent man who is often seen in company with his feet poised upon the top of a chair and nearly as high as his head and not un ! frequently upon a table the habit was ! acquired when a student ; and though a ; whole company has often ached over the ! habit yet it remains unaltered y'ou may ; be boorish in manners and be like john son in that respect ; but he had talents and industry which could make him distin j guished in spite of his ill manners be particularly attentive to your be 1 haviour at table ; for from his situation the student is peculiarly tempted to err there there is an abruptness and blunt ness in the manners of some professional men â€” a complete treading under foot of all politeness it may be attributed to the fact lhat ihey probably associated but little with refined society while students ; and when they came out into the world not knowing how to behave they put on the blunt hair-cloth mode as if conscious of abilities which would suffer them to de spise form and politeness but a man is never more mistaken than when he sup poses that any strength of mind or attain ments will render his company agreeable . while his manners are rude if you are i accustomed to society behave as you know how ; if not accustomed to it be have modestly and you will behave well so lhat in all your intercourse with your fellow-students always maintain the ap pearance and character of a gentleman ; never that of a buffoon or a sloven and as your character now is in these re spects so it is to be through life i have known students whose wash-stand and establishment showed that they were slo vens ; and ihey were never known to-im prove in these respects keep your room and person at all times just as you would j have it if you expected your mother or j sister to make you a visit neatness is j the word by which to designate all that j is meant in regard to your personal ap j pearance cleanliness is the first mark of polite ness it is agreeable to others and is a very pleasant sensation to ourselves the humor of swift was not misapplied when he describes himself as recovering from sickness by changing his linen a clean neat appearance is always a good letter of introduction may i request my rea ders to gather lhe application and moral ofthe following beautiful story a de vise of great sanctity one morning had the misfortune as he took up a crystal cup which was consecrated to the pro phet to let it full upon the ground and dash it to pieces his son coming in some time after he stretched out his hand to bless him as his manner was every mor ning : but the youlh going out scumbled over lhe threshold and broke his arm as the old man wondered at these events a caravan passed by in its way to mecca : the dervise approached it to beg a bless ing ; % but as he stroked one of the holy camels he received a kick from the beast which sorely bruised him ! his sorrow and amazement increased upon him un til he recollected lhat ihrough hurry and inadvertency he had that morning come abroad without washing his hands 9 acejuire the habit of doing every thing well it is well known that johnson used to write and send copy to the press without even looking it over by way of revising this was the effect of habit he began by composing slowly but with great ac curacy we are naturally impatient of restraint and have so little patience at our command that it is a rare thing to find a young man doing any thing as well as he can he wishes to do it quickly and in the conversation of students you seldom hear one tell how well he did this or that but how quickly this is a perni cious habit any thing that is worth do ing at all is worth doing well ; and a mind well disciplined in other respects is defective if it have not this habit a young man who unexpectedly lost the af fections of a young lady of whom he was sufficiently fond informed his friend with a good degree of shrewdness that he doubted not lhat he lost the prize from a very small circumstance she handed him a letter which she had been writing to a friend and asked him to direct it â€” he did so but in a manner so hurried and slovenly for it was his great ambi tion to be quick in doing any ihing that she blushed when she received it from that utile circumstance her affections seemed to cool until they were dead to him his friend comforted him by say ing that " she was more than half right this incident is mentioned not on ac count of its dignity but to illustrate the point in hand every thing should be done well and practice will soon enable you to do it quickly how many are mis erable readers and miserable writers as to manner and matter because they do not possess this habit ! euripides used to compose but three lines while a contem porary poet composed three hundred ; but one wrote for immortality and the j other for the day your reading had bet 1 ter be but little your conversations but few your compositions short and well done the man who is in a " great hur rv is commonly the one w ho hurries over ; the small stages of the journey without making the great business of life to con 'â– â– sist in accomplishing as much as possible the great secret of buonaparte's skill as ; a warrior consisted in this ; that he did his business thoroughly : if he met an ar my in two or three divisions he did not divide his army in the same proportion no : he brought all his strength to bear \ upon one point until that was annihila j ted so with mcdonough during our j last war he directed all his force every j gun against_the " big ship of the enemy ; so matter how pressing or annoying oth ers might be ; every ball was to be sent towards the u big ship till her guns j j were silen this is a irood principle to j carry out in resrnrd to every thing 'â€¢ how is it that you do so much ?" said one in astonishment at the efforts and suc cess of a great man ** why i do but one thing at a time and try to finish it once ! for all i would therefore have you keep ihis in mind : â€” do not send a letter home blotted or hurried and ask them to excuse it because you are in a hurry â€” you have no riirht to be in such a hurry it is doinz injustice to yourself do not make a memorandum so carelessly that in five years you can make nothing of ir do not hurry any thing so that you know not what you do or do not knowcertainly about it and have to trus to vasrue im pressions what we call a superficial character is formÂ°d in this way ; and none who are no f careful to form and cherish tlie habit of doing every thing tccll may expect to be any thins else than superficial to he conlniued pay your debts religion that d.>os not make i man honest is good tor nothing if a nun professes to be a christian and defrauds his neighbor that man's religion is vain and he is dishonest who with holds from another lhat which is his due when it is in his power to pay it we in this country have a had name abroad for our state repudiations but it is tint this of which we wish to speak just now it is ofthe laxnesss not to call it by a harsher name of many professors of religion who seldom or ne ver pay their debts until after being called upon again and again and perhaps finally being threatened with a s-.iii at law there are some such m n in aim ist every community we have one of thes men now in our eye i he is a very amiable easy man who never wishes to quarrel with his neighbors and is al ways willing to do them a favor when thev are in want of help but he never pays his debts if he can av : id it his bills at the store at the shops of mechanics perhaps for the f iocl : which he eafs or the raiment he wears are un paid and he feels not the least compunctions of conscience on the subject he prays in his fam ilyand in the social meeting an 1 some people think that he in iv be a christian ; but men f the world say titat if he would be honest they would have a better opinion of his religion we see another debtor he has no objec tion to buying anything that he can get upon trust : he will even subscribe for a religious newspaper or a new edition of tlie bible and makes load professions f his willingness to aid this object an 1 that but when called on to pay his subscription be is unfortunately just then out of m mey he will certainly pay it in a few days ; but he is no m re ready a m rath af terwards than he was before and he never in i tends to pay he pretends nevertheless to be a pious man but he deceives very i w just now we see another man of this always : owing and never.paying class some time ago ! he conhaeted a heavy debt and he lias never j yet seen the time when he could pay the whole i of it at once ; and therefore he has paid none 1 of it his income has been such that he might ! with a little economy and denial have pai i a part of tlie debt every year and by this time have extinguished it ; but his conscience does ; not seem to trouble him at all alth nigh be lives on that which does not belong to him men may sophisticate as they please thev can never make it right and all the bankrupt laws in the universe can never make it right for them to neglect to pay their debts thes not make a man ' deal justly it is not worth having but what shall a pour man do who is in debt ' let him work hard and pay it em yourself all the luxuries and very many of the comforts t life : be willing to take an humble place in so ciety and mortify your pride ; in dress and style of living be as simple and economical as pos : sible ; if necessary live on bread and water | and labor diligently until you satisfy the de i mantis of your last creditor : but never lay up i a cent of money nor spend a cent needlessly ; while you owe it to another we wish that ! this principle could ik ingrained into the hearts â– and consciences at lea.-t of professing chris 1 tians there is a looseness on the subject in ; the church that is perfectly irreconcilable vrith ! the law of tou and the maintenance of a good '., reputation in the eyes of the world let no man be trusted who neglects to pav : his debts if misfortune has suddenly deprived him of the ability to pay that is another thing : i but if by his c induct he shows that he has no disposition to meet bis engagements especially small debts let him not be trusted he that i unjust in a little will !*â€¢ unjust in much he who defrauds will and there is scarcely no difference between stealing and wilfully ne glecting to discharge a debt â€” v v observer very late fbom ii vyti complete orrr'hrow of th m-dafto govern ment â€” from capt ho rt ofthe brig republic who left port republican on the jtih ultim Â». and arrived here on monday evening says the n y hun we learn that the blaclu have been entirely successful in their engagements with the government troops hera.d s forces had disbanded in the north and he took ret'ige in port republican but was hotly pursued by a superior numerical force ami rt is believed he could not hold out many days the revolu tionists have established an independent gov ernment in the spanish part ofthe island the french admiral lay off port republican with three frigates waiting the issue ot events he would probably take possession of the island and the expected failure of the government to pay the indemnity due to france would be used as a pretext for that purpose the black pop ulation has been fighting for a republican form of government instead of a military despo tisrn and we thiuk the pn miy of the island will cost france rhuch m re th.in artv i*>cunia ry advantage she can ever expect from il prof morses bectro-aaagoetie tuend^ja cmnae o coosowaion between w a *; ti . on anibabhnaae Â» now in faflopc soma ,,â€¢ ,â€ž... /__ w ion ihe care from this city on their w rj to washing ton on \\ e faesday w within tw vv m , - of the lat ter cry raftormathni of the whig noui n tl cms for pre-si dent and vice presi lent were eomniameated v nit in oi ihe telegraph the said tt rs the amok 9 miles and back again making 41 miles m no i^ercepu bie parr of a second of time thornton ii freemmn formerly ptiniimm at car roilton miss.ri.-j who asrpetratel i aeries ci aaaat art fully devised mail robberies and rle i io cmnada ha been delivered up by the canadian anrho snug birth â€” it appears from a report made hy mr connor of the pennsylvania legislatare thai th mem bers are furnished at lhe public expense with eaa sealing wax waters steel pens snapx cigars ananaaanlej flowers razor washing aoap-'raxor-arops pen-kn re ivory folders too - â€¢-. hat brashes nail broshel me heme ar - : ewe'iery perfumery and canes tie egg hatcki g establishmenl has rv-eome one of die nons o vi town tisvishe daily by handreds of persons lhe poor hens a ... rolled of all maternal pleasures we - . fai k e ia c"..n neerjcal is'hiveuiing a machine to lav rss when it is completed all bam door f an illustration of a - g - _-. occurred before ihesapreme conn of n w jersey u â– recent term the court were examining a wi.-j h can late or the honor of ihe cjeert bag wh .: - ; ,-, iri ' askc . leof the bench ' a place an ithesta lent in the let ters if not the words of b a ksrone wktt â€” â– Â« justice is judicially adknintstere l their honors looked grave but did not withhold the diploma latex â€” samuel j barr.has been apppointed bv the president and confirmed by ihe senate to be secretary ofthe territory of iowa fated to death â€” an entrl - : mn and a yanke fbaght a doe in a dark room lately t .â€¢ v . ke bm wishing to have wo ? an .. - bands â€¢â– i his pistol up th chimney a to bis horror dawn came th bag ian man master printers in the tun f ci arte i archbish op la al procured a ; >-Â» passe j tt the stir chamber july 1,1637 " toregalate - yshej v :. ihe trade of printing and pret : a . abaa -- of that excd len an to the distnrban â€¢ ofthechorob " py this decree it was ot lered " th tl i - ace forth shon 1 be reduce 1 t a cerra n m i â€¢â€¢â€¢- . other shnald secretly or e set in the pillory or whippe 1 through ibe strec is and sittcr other ; u lishm al as ::. .: a i:t mighl dunk lit to inflict npon the ofien ler ju l_re mnrny ofthe i o trt of m : â– : â– â€¢ i â– â– â– ry a - ha mi committed suicide aboat a f ow ing oal his brains with â– pistol the canst i th - mel ancholy act w is love tbejo ige w is i mobi â€¢ only a few weeks before a w ,^ :'â– . \ torn he w.-.s engage 1 i>ut on returning toc er oi the la ly refuse i his vhich so operated npon .!.._'â€¢ ms - om mission of an act wh munity in which h lived >..;' a useful citizen an upright ju iÂ»-.aud an honest man . j mdihi dir i w-dijewond joseph fr.,rn convicted at si lou Â»' fthe murder of chavis the mexican trader have ce seal rncft ; i e banged on ihe 14th of ju-te n-x the sentence of thomas tawson also convicted of participation i.i the mnrder w is deferred 4rj'/<â€¢ : that ainasa spragu â– sena tor spragoe was ma len - ii the Â»Â» dnity of providence where â€” i and th. of these m are among the indian tribes ; i in t >: n : id in africa 42 in couitiriee on the m''di:â€¢"> in india ; 37 iti farther india ; 25 in polynesia ; 11 in europe and 1 in soath america the number c>f native communicants connected with those mis sions is 33,259 scholars 32^15 ; assist ant missionaries tÂ»'2 and native assistants 226 bait san european mbsswhs â€” l'he number of clergymen employed c>n foreign missions by the diife"Â«':i f evangelical societies in kuro is 777 of these 270 are iif the wys indies j 3 in west africa j 3 in east africa 115 in south africa 2 in the african islands ; 7 in countries o i the mediterranean 251 in india and ceylon 10 in farther india ; 3 among the ame rican indians and in polynesia the number of cor*vnÂ»unicants connected with thr-s e missions is 1 3o 7 1 ; scholar - 00.207 assistant missionaries 1 19 ; uaivc assist ants 1,703 â€” lb papal mission â€” â– f#526ix)0 expended in one year by the association for propa gating the faith established a lyons in france 943,000 was expended for mis sions in europe ; 193,000 for missions in asia 50,000 for missions in oceanica embracing the islands of the pacific and indian oceans a id 164,000 for missions in america of their periodicals entitled th annals about 120,000 copies publish ed are now print i in seven languages viz fn rich 63j0o0 ; german 17,000 english 16,090 spanish ll,0oo;flem ish 4,000 italian l^-mi portuguese o.ooo amer messenger